1. Self-dilation for therapy-resistant benign esophageal strictures: towards a systematic approach
- Author
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Patricia S. de Koning, Chantal A. ’t Hoen, Jacques J. Bergman, Jeanin E. van Hooft, Wilda D. Rosmolen, Emo E. van Halsema, Graduate School, Gastroenterology and Hepatology, APH - Personalized Medicine, APH - Mental Health, and AGEM - Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Article ,Benign esophageal strictures ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Esophagus ,Patient Education as Topic ,Interquartile range ,Internal medicine ,Esophageal dysphagia ,medicine ,Outpatient clinic ,Humans ,Adverse effect ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Endoscopic therapy ,Endoscopy ,Hepatology ,Middle Aged ,Dysphagia ,Dilatation ,Surgery ,Self Care ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Self-dilation ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Esophageal Stenosis ,Endoscopic dilation ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Abdominal surgery - Abstract
Background Patients with therapy-resistant benign esophageal strictures (TRBES) suffer from chronic dysphagia and generally require repeated endoscopic dilations. For selected patients, esophageal self-dilation may improve patient’s autonomy and reduce the number of endoscopic dilations. We evaluated the clinical course and outcomes of patients who started esophageal self-dilation at our institution. Methods This study was a retrospective case series of patients with TRBES who started esophageal self-dilation between 2012 and 2016 at the Academic Medical Center Amsterdam. To learn self-dilation using Savary-Gilliard bougie dilators, patients visited the outpatient clinic on a weekly basis where they were trained by a dedicated nurse. Endoscopic dilation was continued until patients were able to perform self-bougienage adequately. The primary outcome was the number of endoscopic dilation procedures before and after initiation of self-dilation. Secondary outcomes were technical success, final bougie size, dysphagia scores, and adverse events. Results Seventeen patients started with esophageal self-dilation mainly because of therapy-resistant post-surgical (41%) and caustic (35%) strictures. The technical success rate of learning self-bougienage was 94% (16/17). The median number of endoscopic dilation procedures dropped from 17 [interquartile range (IQR) 11–27] procedures during a median period of 9 (IQR 6–36) months to 1.5 (IQR 0–3) procedures after the start of self-dilation (p
- Published
- 2018